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Elected Bodies:The Gender Quota Law
for Legislative Candidates in Mexico
Lisa BaldezAssociate Professor
Department of GovernmentDartmouth College
Paper presented at the 2003 Meeting of the American Political Science Association,Philadelphia, August 28-31.
2Abstract
In the past decade, twenty-two countries adopted gender quota laws that require between
20% and 50% of all legislative candidates to be women. What explains the adoption of
these laws? This analysis argues that three factors make politicians more likely to adopt
gender quota laws. First, a contagion effect links voluntary quotas at the party level and
national quota laws: parties or majority coalitions in congress support quota laws in order
to disperse the electoral advantage (or disadvantage) that individual parties might gain
from them. The prospects for party quotas to diffuse to the national level depend on
political context. Second, non-electoral branches of government support quotas as a way
to demonstrate their autonomy from other branches, in the context of efforts to establish
separation of powers. Finally, cross-partisan mobilization among female legislators
raises the costs of opposing such legislation by drawing public attention to it. I examine
these three claims with regard to Mexico, where the federal congress passed a 30%
gender quota law in 2002.
3Id give up my seat for you if it wasnt for the fact that Im sitting in it myself.Groucho Marx1
[Many Latin American countries] have homosexual political systems, that is the powerof the political parties and the state is in the hands of only one of the sexes . . .
Line Bareiro, Paraguayan feminist2
The participation of women in politics has become an increasingly salient issue in
recent years. Countries throughout the world have pursued a variety of ways to increase
the number of women active in political life. One of the most popular measures to boost
the presence of women in politics is the adoption of gender quotas. There are several
different kinds of gender quotas. The most common are party-level quotas, which
individual political parties adopt and implement on a purely voluntary basis. As of
August 2003, 122 parties in 58 countries had some kind of quota provision in their
internal statutes. Many people associate the high levels of female legislators in the
Scandinavian countries with the quotas that leftist parties adopted there in the 1970s.
Next are gender quota laws for legislative candidates at the national level.
Twenty-two countries have laws that require all political parties to nominate a minimum
percentage of women as candidates for national legislative office. The level of the quota
ranges from 20% to 50%. Argentina was the first country to adopt a gender quota law, in
1991. The Argentine law requires women to be at least 30% of candidates, and stipulates
that at least one woman be placed in every third spot on the electoral lists. Argentina is
the most dramatically successful case; after the law took effect, womens share of seats in
the Chamber of Deputies rose from an average of 4% to an average of 27% (Jones 1998).
Worldwide, national gender quota laws generate an 8 percentage point increase in the
number of women elected to parliament (Htun and Jones 2002).
4Quota laws that apply to subnational elections constitute a third variation. Eight
of the 10 countries that have subnational quota laws also have national laws, but Greece,
Namibia and South Africa have quota laws that apply only to municipal elections.
Finally, parliaments with reserved seats aside a certain percentage of seats for women
rather than candidate positions. India adopted a policy of reserving one-third of the seats
in its local governments for women, and 10 other countries have reserved seats at either
the national or local level. 3
[Insert Table 1 here]
The widespread adoption of these measures is puzzling because gender quotas
appear to violate one of the most widely held assumptions about legislative behavior in
political sciencethat elected officials seek to protect their positions. Even in countries
where legislators cannot be reelected, holding office is a highly sought after prize, often
critical to advancing ones political career (Carey 1996). Why would predominantly
male politicians adopt measures that would ostensibly limit their own chances to be
nominated for political office, particularly in countries where traditional gender roles
predominate? As one Uruguayan legislator stated during a debate on gender quotas,
Were talking about giving up positions of power here, and nobody likes to give up
power.4
The growing literature on gender quotas tends to focus on either party or national
quotas, but does not explain the conditions under which a country will adopt one or the
other. I argue that three factors must be present in order for parties with voluntary quotas
to support the adoption of national-level quota laws. First is a contagion effect in which
parties or majority coalitions in congress attempt to neutralize the electoral advantages
5gained by individual parties that have incorporated voluntary gender quotas into their
party statutes.5 The impact of the contagion process depends on political context,
specifically the degree to which candidate nomination procedures are institutionalized.
The more uncertainty there is in the ways in which parties choose candidates, the more
likely they are to adopt gender quota laws.
My second point is that the adoption of gender quotas is not purely an electoral
story. Legislatures and presidents are not the only institutions relevant to the passage of
quota laws. Courts have also played an important role because the most powerful
argument against gender quota laws is that they violate constitutional guarantees of equal
protection under the law. Efforts to establish separation of powers, particularly in Latin
America amid the process of democratic consolidation, have made courts important
players in policy debates. Changes in the relative autonomy of the main branches of
government provide an opportunity for both advocates and opponents of quota laws to
press their demands, given the centrality of the question of equal protection to the issue.
In the wake of democratic transitions throughout Latin America, members of the
judiciary, in particular, have sought to establish legitimacy by signaling their autonomy
from other political leaders to the public at large. Judges may use womens rights issues,
including gender quota laws, to demonstrate their independence. This provides an
opportunity for quota law supporters to pit the various branches of government against
one another in order to gain leverage on behalf of their desired policy outcomes.
Finally, cross-partisan mobilization by women plays an important role in quota
law passage (Jaquette 1997; Jones 1996; Krook 2001). Because of widespread patterns
of exclusion, female politicians from parties across the political spectrum have an interest
6in greater access to positions of power.6 A shared condition of systematic exclusion from
candidate slots can facilitate the formation of a strong, well-organized lobbying campaign
on behalf of women from all the major parties. Cross-partisan coalitions of female
politicians who can credibly threaten to denounce their male colleagues as sexist for
opposing quotas represent a powerful pro-quota force. Such a coalition can force
legislators to adopt a variation of the blame avoidance described by Kent Weaver
(1988): politicians adopt a particular measure not to claim credit for it, but in order to
avoid being punished for failing to adopt it.
I examine these claims with regard to Mexico, a country whose notoriety for
machismo makes it an unlikely candidate for the adoption of gender quotas.
Furthermore, the prospects for passing an effective quota law, or any womens rights
legislation for that matter, did not seem promising after the victory of Vicente Fox of the
center-right National Action Party (PAN) in the 2000 presidential election (Stevenson
2001; Lamas 2002). Given the conservative stance on womens issues among most of the
male leaders in the PAN and the partys classical liberal orientation, it seemed highly
unlikely that PAN legislators would support a bill strengthening affirmative action
measures for women.
In Mexico, the adoption of voluntary quotas at the party level was followed by the
adoption of a much stricter quota law at the national level. Two of the three main
political parties (and several of the minor ones) adopted voluntary, party-level quotas in
the early 1990s. The Mexican Congress followed suit by passing a relatively weak quota
law in 1996, which recommended that no more than 70% of the candidates for
parliamentary office be women. The law proved ineffectual because it permitted the
7parties to comply by nominating women to alternate spots (suplentes) and did not
stipulate a placement mandate, which meant that women could be clustered in
unelectable spots at the bottom of a list.
On April 30, 2002, the Mexican Congress passed a much stricter version of the
law that applies to the main candidates (proprietarios), not to the alternates. Mexico has
a mixed electoral system in which 300 deputies are elected by plurality vote in single-
member districts and 200 deputies are elected by a proportional representation system in
5 districts of 40 candidates each. The new reform requires that no more than 70% of the
candidates for single-member districts be of the same gender.7 In the proportional
representation lists, women must hold at least one of every three spots. The sanctions for
noncompliance are strict: if a party submits a list that does not adhere to these rules, it has
48 hours to correct the problem. If after 48 hours the party has still not complied, the
Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) will issue a public reprimand (amonestacin pblica)
against the party. If after another 24 hours the party does not correct the problem, that
party cannot submit any candidates for the district in question. The law does not apply to
candidates for single-member districts who are chosen by means of direct election. In
Mexico as in many other countries, the quota law passed with a nearly unanimous vote
The new quota law was implemented for the first time in the mid-term legislative
elections held July 6, 2003.
This paper examines how this surprising outcome transpired. How did a strong,
enforceable gender quota law pass in Mexicowith strong supportdespite these
apparently unpropitious conditions? My answer to this question draws from interviews
conducted with male and female leaders of the three major parties (PRI, PAN and PRD)
8during fieldwork trips to Mexico City in July 2002 and May 2003, analysis of party
documents, accounts of the issue in Mexicos leading newspapers (El Universal, La
Reforma and La Jornada), as well as reports from cimacnoticias.com, an online agency
for news about women.
Existing Arguments
The existing literature offers a series of arguments that have been offered to
explain the adoption of gender quota laws, based on changes in international norms,
political culture, mobilization and electoral considerations.
International Factors. The United Nations Convention to End All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), which 168 countries have signed, stresses the
importance of womens participation in political decision-making and calls for the
adoption of temporary special measures aimed at accelerating de facto equality between
men and women. 8 The promotion of women in decision-making positions figured
prominently in the Platform for Action developed at the United Nations Conference on
Women in Beijing (1995). Beijing in particular legitimated the issue of womens
representation, helped establish new international norms regarding womens rights, and
gave transnational activists in many countries the tools they needed to pressure for quotas
at home (Htun and Jones 2002; Lubertino 1992; Meier 2000b; Stevenson 2000). As
Kathleen Bruhn (2003) points out, Beijing did not necessarily set the quota law adoption
process in motion; two of the main political parties in Mexico adopted quotas before
1995. But international conferences help explain why certain countries moved from
party-level to national quota laws. They demonstrated that womens exclusion from
candidate slots was a widespread phenomenon, raising legislators consciousness and
9facilitating cooperation among legislators from different parties. Nonetheless,
international influences led to reform in some countries but not all, making them a
necessary but not sufficient explanation for quota law adoption.
Political Culture. Some argue that gender quota laws tend to be implemented in
countries characterized by egalitarian political cultures (Bystydzienski 1995; Inhetveen
1999; Lovenduski and Norris 1993; Squires 1996). In Belgium, for example, Meier
(2000a) argues that politicians adopted gender quota laws with relatively little debate
because they were consistent with a political culture premised on consociational notions
of group representation. Latin America also has a strong tradition of group rights, based
on a corporatist model of sectoral interests (Wiarda 2001). In one sense, gender quotas
represent the extension and formalization of a fundamental part of Mexican political
culture.
Nonetheless, the extension of group rights to women remains surprising given
Mexicos legendary culture of machismoyet recent public opinion polls suggest that
culture has diminished. Recent survey data has revealed widespread support for womens
rights and womens participation in politics, especially among young people. In a 1996
Gallup poll (co-sponsored by the Inter-American Dialogue), 55% of Mexicans surveyed
agreed that this country would be governed better if more women were in political
office and 56% said that a presidential candidates opinion regarding womens issues
would be very important to them. Even more significant are the answers to a question
specifically about quotas. The relevant question read, As you may already know,
women must comprise 30 percent of political party candidates in general elections. What
is your general opinion of this quota for womendo you think it is mostly good for the
10
country or do you think it is mostly bad for the country? Among Mexicans, 67% of men
and 68% of women replied mostly good.9
Mobilization. Pressure exerted on legislators by womens organizations and
female party leaders represents a third category of explanation for the adoption of gender
quota laws. Quota laws are more likely to be adopted in response to popular mobilization
by womens organizations. Several studies have pointed to mobilization on behalf of
women by groups outside the party system as critical to the adoption of gender
quotasin Europe (Krook 2001), in Latin America (Htun and Jones 2002; Jones 1996;
Schmidt 2001; Stevenson 2001) and elsewhere (Lovenduski and Norris 1993, Norris and
Lovenduski 1995, Jaquette 1997). Pressure exerted by female party leaders inside the
political system is also relevant. Women in political parties are particularly skilled in
how to mobilize voters in support of their cause, and well equipped to do so. Some
studies show that the adoption of party-level quotas is in part a function of the presence
of women in party leadership; the higher the percentage of women in leadership posts
within a party, the more likely that party will adopt voluntary candidate quotas (Caul
2001; Short 1996). Their chances for success improve when they frame their arguments
in terms of womens exclusion from the political process (Jenson and Valiente 2003;
Krook 2001).
Electoral Concerns. A fourth set of explanations relies on a straightforward
electoral story: male politicians vote for gender quotas in an effort to win female votes in
elections where the outcome is uncertain and when gender quotas are perceived as salient
to a constituency whose votes may be pivotal (Howard-Merriam 1990; Htun and Jones
2002; Matland and Studlar 1996). Politicians adopt gender quota laws for eminently
11
pragmatic reasons, particularly to boost their support among women and close the gender
gap (Allwood 1995; Allwood and Wadia 2000; Costain 1992; Costain N.D.; Stevenson
2001). This view makes sense given that women make up the majority of the electorate
in many countries and female voters may constitute an important set of swing voters in
close elections. From this perspective, gender quotas allow politicians to exploit a gender
gap in voter support and claim credit with their female constituents (Mayhew 1974).
Gender gaps in voting translate into behavioral change only if political entrepreneurs use
them as leverage for their concerns. Mueller (1988) argues that politicians in the U.S. did
not respond to a gender gap in voting behavior until womens organizations brought it to
the attention of the public (see also Matland and Studlar 1996).
I argue that Mexican parties adopted a quota law not to claim credit with voters,
but to avoid blame. This argument diverges from the conclusion drawn by Kathleen
Bruhn (2003), that electoral considerations did not shape the decision of Mexican parties
to adopt gender quotas, but is consistent with evidence she provides. Bruhn reports that
few people knew about them and the parties made little effort to publicize them once they
were adopted. When faced with voting on quota legislation, party leaders would have
preferred not to approve it but did not want to be perceived as opposing it given high
levels of public support.
The Contagion Effect
Richard Matland and Donley Studlar (1996) describe a process of contagion that
explains the diffusion of voluntary quotas across political parties: as smaller but
competitive parties, usually on the political fringe, start to promote women actively,
larger parties will move to emulate them. Other parties follow suit when they see they
12
electoral advantages reaped by the innovating party, either to neutralize those advantages
or to capitalize on them. I adapt this argument to explain why legislators from parties
that have already adopted voluntary quotas would support an effort to adopt a quota law
that covers all political parties. Matland and Studlar focus on the impact of quota
adoption on voters, presuming that the adoption of voluntary quotas elicits increased
support among female voters. However, the impact that quota laws have on voters is
indirect at best given the numerous factors that voters might consider in any given
election. Quota laws have a much more direct effect on female politicians. Women in
the parties support gender quotas to increase their chances for being nominated for run
for office, and to advance their own political careers. The contagion effect can occur
even if quota laws have no effect on a partys electoral fortunes; it can spread as women
from other parties demand them. As I will show, the success or extent of the contagion
process also depends on the political context of a particular case.
In Mexico, the contagion process started out as Matland and Studlar predict it
would: a small leftist party adopted a voluntary gender quota provision. The PRI
responded to the PRDs efforts because of pressure exerted by increasingly powerful
women within the party, in the context of electoral competition and the introduction of
electoral uncertainty. The contagion process did not extend to the PAN, a party with few
women in positions of leadership (until recently) and a stable, institutionalized process of
candidate nominations.
The adoption of a gender quota law, and the relationship between party level and
national level quotas, must be understood within the context of conflicts regarding
candidate nomination procedures within the long-time ruling party, the PRI. Opposition
13
parties have long existed in Mexico, but PRI control over resources and the rules of the
game sharply curtailed their ability to influence policy. Growing dissent over time
prompted the PRI to adopt a series of electoral reforms that increased the possibilities for
opposition parties to compete. In the 1988 election, the PRI faced its first significant
electoral challenge when Cuahtemoc Cardenas, a former scion of the PRI and leader of
the dissident Democratic Convergence coalition, came close to beating PRI candidate
Carlos Salinas. Widespread accusations of fraud damaged the legitimacy of the one-
party state. The PRI suffered losses in Congress as well, for the first time in its history
failing to secure the two-thirds majority necessary to amend the constitution.
These setbacks set the stage for reform of the partys candidate selection
procedures. Until 1988, the president of the PRI effectively controlled nominations of
candidates for all levels of political office (Casar 2002). The PRI organized its members
according to three sectors: peasants, workers and popular organizations.
Traditionally, the party allocated nominations for legislative office through informal
quotas allocated across these organizations. Party leaders selected candidates according
to their ability to mobilize voters in their particular sectors. This practice, known as
filling quotas of power (cuotas de poder), corresponded to corporatist entities, not to
identity-based groups (Langston 1998). As other parties begin winning elections, the PRI
could no longer guarantee the spoils of office to loyal activists. This prompted a series of
efforts to reform the process and intense factional conflicts within the party. As Joy
Langston {, 2003 #908, 295} writes, Without a single acknowledged leader capable of
enforcing agreements, the PRI had no acceptable method of internal negotiation over
candidacies and leadership aside from factional infighting.
14
In the wake of his defeat in the 1988 election, losing presidential candidate
Cuahetemoc Cardenas formed a new party, the Revolutionary Democratic Party (PRD),
made up largely of leftists who defected from the PRI. Many PRD members left the PRI
out of frustration for being passed over in the candidate nomination process, sonot
surprisinglyinternal democratization became a particularly salient issue for the new
party, one of its fundamental political principles (Bruhn 1997, 171). The PRDs
commitment to internal democracy represented an effort to separate itself from the PRIs
history of authoritarian decision-making and quotas of influence (Bruhn 1997, 171).
Despite its ostensible antipathy for quotas, the PRD was the first party in Mexico
to adopt a voluntary gender quota. In 1990, the PRD passed a 20% quota for women in
leadership positions, an effort led by female party leaders Rosario Robles and Amalia
Garca (Stevenson 2000, 207). The representation of women on the PRD lists in the 1991
congressional elections was extremely poor. In terms of the number of female candidates
it nominated, the PRD, with perhaps the most democratic internal procedures of any
party, came in dead last, tenth out of ten parties competing in the election.10 This
outcome prompted Robles and Garcia to redouble their efforts at the 1993 party congress.
They persuaded the party to apply the 20% quota to candidate lists for the PR spots for
federal and state-level elections, a resolution that the party voted to approve by a narrow
margin (Stevenson 2000, 210).
Shortly afterwards, the PRI countered with a legislative measure to increase
womens participation. On September 11, 1993, the PRI-dominated congress amended
the electoral law to read: The political parties will promote, in terms determined by their
internal statutes, greater participation of women in the political life of the country by way
15
of their nomination for popularly elected positions.11 This law did not stipulate a formal
quota and included no enforcement mechanism, but the timing of its adoption makes it
plausible to interpret it as an effort to respond to the PRDs 20% quota.
In 1993, the PRD upped the ante by adopting a 30% quota for internal and
legislative candidates, which stipulated that one of every three candidates be of a
different gender. The party nominated more female candidates in 1994 elections than it
had in 1991, but still fell short of its own quota, with women holding approximately 25%
of all nominations (Bruhn 1997, 180).
In the PRI, meanwhile, a series of crises that occurred in 1994 further enhanced
the ability of groups within the party to reform the statutes regarding candidate selection
(Langston 2001). The Chiapas rebellion and the assassination of presidential candidate
Luis Donaldo Colosio threw the party into chaos. At its January 1996 convention, under
the leadership of Mara Elena Chapa, the PRI approved a recommendation to field no
more than 70% of candidates of the same gender on its electoral lists. This measure did
not require that the quota be implemented and contained no enforcement mechanism
(Stevenson 1999). In November 1996, the PRI-dominated Congress wrote this measure
into law. It amended Article 1 of the electoral law to read: the political parties will
consider in their statutes that the candidates for deputy and senator will not exceed 70%
for the same gender. They will also promote greater political participation for women.
This law encouraged parties to nominate a certain percentage of women as candidates,
but did not require them to do so, and it did not prevent parties from naming women to
alternate positions, a practice known as putting women in as filling (mujeres de
rellena). The parties adhered to the quotas in a minimalist way, interpreting the no more
16
than 70% clause as a ceiling of 30% for women, and taking advantage of Mexicans
system of electing two candidates for every legislative seata proprietario and an
alternate, called the suplenteto minimize the impact of the change. Women were
overwhelmingly nominated to positions as suplentes rather than proprietarios.
It is implausible to argue that the PRI adopted these reforms in order to close a
gender gap. The party had always enjoyed strong support among female voters.12 What
had changed was the power of women in the party; during this period, women rose to
prominent leadership positions within the PRI. Beatriz Paredes became head of the
peasants sector, and Elba Ester Gordillo, former head of the powerful teachers union,
led the popular sector (Rodrguez 1998, 14). Mara de los Angeles Moreno became
president of the Senate in 1997, and President Zedillo appointed several women to his
cabinet. Thus, women had an unusually high profile in the party leadership of the PRI.
Women also ascended to key leadership positions in the PRD: Rosario Robles
was the mayor of Mexico City, and Amalia Garca was elected president of the PRD on
the eve of the 2000 elections. In the PRD National Congress held April 2001, these two
women led an effort to raise the level of their partys gender quota to 50%. The measure
failed due to opposition from a left-wing faction within the party. In this case, a leftist
group opposed gender quotas in the name of decentralization and internal party
democracy. The faction blocked parity and several other proposals that would have
increased the power of the central leadership over candidate nominations. One of the
proposals they blocked would allowed the central committee to nominate closed lists of
candidates for plurality seats, which would have made it easier to implement the 50%
parity requirement (La Jornada 2001). The parity measure failed, so the 30% party-level
17
quota remains on the books for the PRD; currently, the party statutes require that neither
gender may hold more than 70% of the plurinomial candidate spots or leadership posts.13
Nonetheless, the PRDs failure to enforce these rules fueled support for a national law
with tougher enforcement mechanisms.14
At the PRIs National Assembly six months later, in November 2001, quota
advocates succeeded where the PRD had failed. The party adopted a parity measure that
requires women to hold 50% of the partys candidates and leadership posts. At the
beginning of 2002, quota law advocates had three allies in positions of considerable
power in the PRI: the president and vice-president of the party and the President of the
Congress. Elba Ester Gordillo was elected as the PRIs vice-president, on a ticket with
Madrazo. Beatriz Paredes went on to become elected President of the Mesa Directiva of
the Congress, the committee that sets the legislative agenda.
In this context of increasing electoral competition, the third major party resisted
efforts to adopt voluntary quotas. The National Action Party (PAN) formed in 1939 as a
conservative Catholic party. Its traditional base of support comes from the pro-clerical
south and fiscally conservative business sectors from the urban north. The party has an
impressive history of firsts with regard to women, but its recent efforts to promote
womens rights have been ambivalent at best. The party firmly opposes efforts to
legalize abortion, and its stances on other issues often reveals splits between progressive
and conservative sectors. The other parties have made womens rights a salient issue in
their competition with the PAN, frequently accusing the party of espousing retrograde
attitudes with regard to women.15 The PAN resisted all efforts to adopt gender quotas
until 1999, on the grounds that quotas were at odds with the partys classic liberal
18
ideology and incompatible with the partys candidate nomination procedures. In
comparison to the practices of its competitors, the PANs nominating process looks
democratic; party members vote among slates of candidates in district-level elections.
However, the fact that party leaders carefully select which party members attend the
nominating conventions tends to predetermine the outcome. The PAN was able to resist
the gender quota contagion until 1999 because the partys nominating rules remained
stable throughout this period, and few women held leadership spots. In June 1999, the
the PAN change its statutes in order to comply with the gender quota provision of the
electoral law and (in September 1999) agreed that each set of propietarios and suplentes
for the proportional representation lists would include a woman and a man.
The process of contagion spread from 1990 to 1999, but it appeared to have little
effect. Despite a decades worth of efforts to increase womens representation, the
percentage of women elected to Congress decreased in the 2000 election. One additional
woman entered the Senate, but the percentage of women elected to the House of Deputies
dropped from 17.4% in 1997 to 16.8% in 2000 (the level rose later when several male
deputies stepped down from their posts and female suplentes took their place). This
reversal challenged assumptions that the election of women would continue to increase
over time, a realization that prompted feminist legislators to redouble their efforts to pass
an enforceable gender quota law at the national level. According to Mara Elena Chapa,
feminists throughout the region realized that in all the countries of Latin America, the
number of women [elected] was dropping each election. We had 93 female deputies, and
now [as of 2002] we have 82. In all these countries, why was the number of women
19
falling, if we had been fighting for this for so many years?16 Awareness of a broader
pattern of decline fueled efforts to adopt quotas at home.
[Insert Figure 1 here]
By the middle of 2001, each of the three main partiesthe PRI, the PRD and the
PANhad adopted some kind of quota provision for women in its internal party statutes,
but their interests relative to a national-level law differed significantly. Female leaders of
the PRI and the PRD supported a quota law as a way to ensure that gender quotas would
be enforced. Many male PRI leaders supported the law because it would reduce the
candidate quota from 50% to 30%. High-ranking PAN officials vehemently opposed a
quota law. How did quota supporters manage to overcome the PANs resistance?
The Role of the Supreme Court in the Quota Debate
While changes in internal party rules are part of the story, non-elective branches
of government can also play an important role in the adoption of gender quota laws. In
Mexico, quota law opponents took the issue to the courts, claiming that gender quotas
were unconstitutional on the grounds of equal protection. The Mexican Supreme Court
upheld this challenge to the quota law provision of a state-level electoral law, a decision
that undermined the opposition to quotas and proved critical in the effort to pass a
national law.
On November 16, 2001, the state legislature of Coahuila passed a gender quota
law as part of a set of reforms to the states electoral law. Coahuila is one of thirteen
Mexican states have added quota provisions to their electoral laws, all in the past three
years (since 2000).17 The Coahuila law requires the parties to promote gender equity, and
establishes a quota of no more than 70% of either gender for candidates for the single-
20
member district deputy spots.18 On December 10, 2001, the National Action Party filed
an action of unconstitutionality against the law, claiming that to establish a fixed,
maximum percentage of one gender constitutes a failure to consider the principle of
equality on the basis of Article Four of the Mexican Constitution (2002).19 Filing
constitutional claims against quota laws is not unprecedented; courts found gender quota
laws unconstitutional France in 1982 and in Italy in 1993. The strategic considerations
behind the PANs decision to file this claim are unclear, although it is likely that the PAN
viewed the gender quota provision as giving an electoral advantage to the PRI, the PANs
main competitor in Coahuila. Moreover, the application of the gender quota to single-
member district elections a significant constraint on candidate nominations, greater than
it would have for multi-member districts. Regardless, the move clearly indicates strong
opposition to gender quotas on the part of the PANs top national-level leadership.
One month later, on January 11, 2002, the PAN leadership tried to retract the case
from the Supreme Court docket, acting under pressure from women in the party and
negative publicity from other womens groups. In a press release, the party affirmed:
we have conducted a scrupulous analysis that leads us to conclude that the claim under
consideration is out of step with the actions that the party has been taking over the past
few years to actively promote the participation of women in national political life and in
the party (Nunez 2002).
The Supreme Court balked at this maneuver. The justice in charge of the case,
Sergio Salvador Aguirre Anguiano, rejected the PANs efforts to remove the case from
consideration, stating one cannot take a step backwards in terms of litigation; once
presented before the Court, the tribunal must consider the case and determine whether the
21
reforms in question are constitutional or not. His words testify to the Courts efforts to
establish its legitimacy in Mexican politics: It is not possible to comply with this request
because it would negate the powers that the Constitution confers upon the Supreme
Court, and because determining whether the articles in question are or are not
constitutional, is a question that requires a thorough study of the topic, he affirmed
(Fuentes 2002a).20 Aguirres assertion of judicial independence is particularly striking
given that he is the only panista minister on the court.
On February 20, 2002, the Supreme Court announced that it had voted to uphold
the gender quota stipulated by the Coahuila electoral law, by a vote of 8 to 2. Leading
newspapers reported that the Court set a precedent in electoral law with this decision
(El Universal 2002). Speaking on behalf of the majority, Minister Guillermo Ortiz
Mayagoitia, stated: the Coahuila law is directed toward the political parties, not at the
citizens, and therefore does not create any inequality among them (Fuentes 2002b).
This statement suggests that the Courts decision rested on the principle that political
parties have a different juridical status than individual citizens, and that constitutional
protections for individual equality do not extend to political parties. The Court
maintained that the Coahuila law did not violate the principle of equality between men
and women, given that if a party or coalition exceeds the percentage, the only
consequence would be that the first spot on the proportional representation list would be
granted to someone from the underrepresented gender. The majority ruling further
affirmed the principle of group representation, arguing that democracy as it is
understood in the Constitution consists in giving opportunity to the presence of
underrepresented minorities (Fuentes 2002b).21
22
The motivations for the Supreme Court decision in the Coahuila case are two-
fold. The justices acted in part out of genuine support for a progressive agenda on
womens rights, as it had with regard to the Ley Robles, a controversial law that
liberalized abortion in Mexico City.22 Moreover, Supreme Court justice Olga Sanchez
Cordero played an important role in influencing the perspectives of her male colleagues
in both the Robles and Coahuila decisions.23
The Court was also motivated by a desire to demonstrate its independence from
the executive branch, whose preferences it challenged in both the quota and abortion
cases, consistent with the interpretation offered by Jeff Staton (2002). The medias
treatment of the Coahuila gender quota decision lends support to the proposition that the
case is relevant to the Courts standing in public opinion and to perceptions that it is
institutionally autonomous. For example, the two dissenting justices in the Coahuila
decision (Juan Silva Meza and Humberto Romn Palacios) became associated with their
opposition to the quota provision in the media, even in stories unrelated to the case.24 A
feature story on the Supreme Court lists the Coahuila case as one of 9 controversial cases
that demonstrate the pioneering role of the Court (Pastrana 2002).
While additional research on judicial decision-making is needed to understand the
basis for the Courts decision more fully, the decision on the Coahuila case proved
critical for the passage of a national-level quota law. PRI Deputy Mara Elena Chapa, a
long-time supporter of quotas, maintained that the decision paved the way for the
passage of the quota law because it cancelled out the arguments of those who claimed
that gender quotas are unconstitutional (Maya 2002).25 Interviews with deputies from the
PAN and the PRD confirmed this.26
23
Cross-partisan Mobilization
Two weeks after the Coahuila decision, quota advocates in Congress moved to
bring the quota issue onto the floor. On March 8, International Womens Day, PRI leader
and President of the Executive Committee of Congress Beatriz Paredes convened two
committees (Governance, and Gender and Equity) and instructed them to bring a gender
quota bill before Congress by April 18 (Gonzalez 2002).
The quota issue divided PAN leaders. PAN president Luis Felipe Bravo Mena
(who brought the Supreme Court case against the Coahuila law in the first place) opposed
the law. Many Mexicans associated the PANs view of quotas with a colorful statement
that PAN leader Diego Fernandez de Cevallos made at a conference of female panistas
held on March 16, 2002. He was quoted as having said, Do I believe in quotas?
Frankly, no, because if we start with quotas, we would also have to look for, all of a
sudden, las cuotas para los jotos (Salazar and Barajas 2002). Jotos is a Mexican slang
term for homosexuals. But prominent female leaders in the PAN broke ranks with their
male colleagues in order to support the bill (Gonzalez 2002).
A united front among women from all the parties proved critical in persuading
their male colleagues to support the bill. Women from across the main parties had
cooperated on several other womens rights issues in the 1990s, including laws
penalizing sexual violence and domestic violence (Bruhn 2003; Stevenson 2000). As
Mara Elena Chapa recalled,
We have worked as a plurality, a step that we learned in 1998, when femalelegislators from all the parties sat down together to put our causes that we had toresolve above our party ideologies. Together we passed the Law Against Assaultand Sexual Harassment in 1990, lateralso working togetherwe won theapproval of the Belen de Para Convention regarding domestic violence, the Law
24
Against Domestic Violence, the National Womens Institute and of course nowthe quotas, affirmative action.27
PAN Deputy Gabriela Cuevas initially opposed it on the grounds that it discriminated
against women and stigmatized women by not allowing them to participate on the basis
of meritbut she became convinced that it was necessary after learning more about it
from members of the Gender and Equity Committee.28 Like other skeptics, she became
convinced that there was no other way to increase the number of women elected (Bruhn
2003).
The real power behind womens ability to unite across partisan lines lay in the
lobbying strategy they used with their male colleagues. They predicted that male
politicians would be more receptive to arguments made by a woman from another party.
According to Chapa:
We strategically divided the negotiation among ourselves. It is more difficult forour male colleagues to say no, when it is women from other parties who sit downwith them to convince them [of a particular position]. It was an organizedcampaign, and there was much less resistance. To ones own female colleagues,it is much easier to say here come those annoying women [esas latosas] again.If a woman from another party comes, well then they refrain from making ajudgment. In all the parties, they are immersed in a culture that we cannot ignore,regarding our male colleagues.29
PAN leader Germn Martinez confirmed this point: Its one thing to confront the
women in your own party. But when you are up against women from the other parties,
its difficult to say no.30 Ironically, women relied on traditional gender rolesin this
case mens gentlemanly deference toward womento persuade them to support a
measure whose aim was to undo traditional gender roles.
Another factor that proved critical to the passage of this law was womens ability
to focus public attention on the issue. The political entrepreneurship of Patricia Espinosa,
25
PAN leader and Director of the National Womens Institute, is particularly noteworthy in
this respect. One of principle resources of the National Womens Institute is to harness
the national media through the purchase of paid government advertising, an action
Espinosa took at critical points in the legislative process. One example appeared on
February 12, 2002, a week before the Supreme Court issued its decision on the Coahuila
case. Espinosa published a statement titled Quotas are Necessary to Guarantee the
Participation of Women in the Political Parties in all three main national newspapers (El
Universal, Reforma and La Jornada). Using government resources to pay for these ads
allowed the Womens Institute to circumvent the competition for media coverage and
avoid uncertainty over the substantive content of media coverage.31 By doing so,
Espinosa took an internal party struggle into the public arena, expanding the scope of
conflict and opening the doors of the smoky back rooms to let in the light of public
attention. Her ability to build a constituency of support around womens rights issues
gave her some autonomy and leverage within her party.
The pro-quota coalition was so confident were they in public support for the
quotas that they included public censure as a punishment for failure to comply. The law
punishes parties with a public reprimand if they fail to comply, a provision that many
quota supporters considered to be the most powerful component of the law. As PRD
Deputy Hortensia Aragn affirmed, We went directly to the public reprimand
(amonestacin pblica) followed by the cancellation of the partys registry. We didnt
want to fine them or reduce their [campaign finance subsidy] . . . no, no, no, no, the issue
of gender is not a question of pesos and centavos.32 PAN legislators preferred fines
rather than a public reprimand, which suggests that they too considered financial
26
punishment less costly (in electoral terms) than being portrayed as opposing womens
issues in the midst of an election (La Reforma 2002; Salazar 2002)). As PAN leader
Margarita Zavala stated in an interview, the party could not afford the negative publicity
that would have arisen from a vote against the quota law: We do not have the money to
counteract the impact that voting against the quota would have in the media; this is what
finally convinced the last holdouts, that we would have to explain why we voted as we
did.33 A PRD deputy who spoke on the condition of anonymity said if we achieve
nothing more than that the public reprimand be a reprimand with all the weight from all
the media . . . that would be enough. Because that is the moment at which the parties are
calling for women first and foremost to vote for them.34 This deputys desire to remain
off the record with regard to this statement further attests to the salience of this issue, as
well as her expectations that the reprimand would prove to be an important issue in the
implementation of the lawexpectations that, it turned out, were not realized in the
election.
Womens lobbying efforts succeeded. One PAN leader confided that the party
supported the bill for pragmatic reasons, rather than out of conviction and for fear of
the electoral consequences. He became convinced that the other parties would jump on
the opportunity to show that the PAN was against women, and added that we supported
quotas because we did not want to put at risk all the other programs we have created for
women.35 The results of the survey conducted by the Inter-American Dialogue and
Gallup also influenced the PANs decision to support a national-level quota law.36
While PAN leaders ultimately supported the bill, they sought to include
amendments that would weaken its impact. The PAN sought to eliminate the placement
27
mandate, so that the quota could be counted as a percentage of all the lists considered
together, rather a percentage of spots on each individual list. It succeeded in adding a
clause that parties who chose candidates via direct election (primaries) should be exempt
from applying the quota.37 At the time the bill was under discussion, quota supporters
did not believe this would be a significant issue. They were not worried because they did
not consider any of the parties to hold legitimately direct elections, and they believed the
Federal Electoral Institute would support this interpretation.38
Men in the PRI supported the effort to pass a national quota enthusiastically. All
three proposals represented a smaller quota than the 50-50 rule recently adopted by the
PRI. As PRI Deputy Mara Elena Chapa stated in an interview, male deputies from the
PRI thought it was a very good idea to pass [the quota law] because it was less than what
the party statutes required.39 PRI Deputy Concepcin Gonzalez confirmed this point,
stating that the men in the PRI were really scared by the parity provision. When the
proposal was introduced, they said, sure, yes, lets approve the law, of course Ill sign
it!40
In the end, the bill passed by a vote of 403 in favor, 7 against and 12 abstentions.
All of the bills opponents, and all but one of the abstainers, were male PAN deputies.
On May 1, the Senate approved the measure by a unanimous vote. Once the bill passed,
the party issued statements that celebrated the new law and described it as consistent with
the PANs history of being a leader in terms of incorporating women into political life.
Reforma reported that the PAN took advantage of this opportunity to remind people
that the first woman to run for governor, the first female mayor, and the first woman to be
28
a member of the Executive Committee of a party were all members of the PAN (Nunez
2002; Salazar and Barajas 2002).
Implementation of the New Law
The law was implemented for the first time in the mid-term legislative elections
for the Chamber of Deputies held on July 6, 2003. In the vast majority of cases, the
parties complied fully with the law. As IFE Councillor Jacqueline Peschard stated in an
interview, the parties complied fully, even overcomplied . . . because the penalty [for
failing to comply] was so severe.41 As Figure 2 shows, all of the parties surpassed the
30% threshold for both the single-member district and proportional representation
districts. The parties far surpassed the quota in the PR seats, with an average of XX%
across all the lists.
[Insert Figure 2 about here]
While technically the parties did comply with the law, they made ample use of the
clause that exempts parties that choose their candidates by direct election from
fulfilling the quotas. This proved critical in the 300 single-member districts. Overall, of
across all of the 12 parties/coalitions competing in this election, the majority of
candidates were designated by party leaders78%and a minority were chosen in
direct elections 22%. Within the three major parties, however, just under half of the
candidates were chosen in direct elections and slightly more than half were designated by
party leaders (49.4% and 50.6% respectively). In other words, the quota law applied to
only half of the candidate slots for the three major parties. For the PRI, the quota law
applied to only a tiny minority of districts: 6 out of 300. The PAN applied the quota to
half of its districts, and the PRD applied it to 85% of its districts. Figure 3 compares the
29
percentage of women nominated in the districts to which the quota applied, to the
percentage of women nominated across all districts, broken down by party.
It is questionable how direct most of the candidate elections really were. The law
does not define what constitutes direct and the IFE offered no guidelines as to what did
and did not count as legitimately direct elections. One of the IFE Councilors
acknowledged this explicitly in a general assembly on April 18, 2003, the day the parties
submitted their lists of single-member district candidates: the Federal Electoral Institute
accepts the claims of the political parties [regarding whether the elections they held were
direct or not] as truthful and valid, inasmuch as they are institutions of good faith, whose
affirmations must be taken as legitimate, unless proven otherwise.42
Despite these exemptions, women won 23% of the seats in the Chamber of
Deputies, up from 16% in the previous legislature. These results catapulted Mexico from
#55 in the world ranking of women in legislative office to #23, a spot it now shares with
Switzerland (Inter-Parliamentary Union 2003). The 7% increase that occurred in Mexico
is just one point below the average increase that quota laws generate (Htun and Jones
2002).
Conclusion
Gender quota laws are increasingly prominent landmarks on the electoral map,
particularly in places one might not expect to find them. This examination of the Mexican
case highlights three factors that contributed to the adoption of a gender quota law in
2002: first, a political context of electoral uncertainty that opened up the possibilities for
reform of the rules by which parties selected their candidates; second, a shifting balance
30
of power among political institutions that has accompanied the consolidation of
democracy in Mexico; and third, consensus among female leaders in various parties in
support of gender quotas, coupled with the creative use of resources at their disposal.
The Mexican case demonstrates that, while electoral concerns are part of the
story, non-elective branches of government have also played important roles in the
adoption of gender quota laws. What about the counterfactual? Would the electoral
reform have passed without the Supreme Courts favorable decision?43 Perhaps. Yet the
Coahuila decision significantly reduced the bargaining power of PAN leaders opposed to
the reform. The Court decision obviated objections that gender quotas violated
constitutional guarantees of equal protection. If, on the other hand, the Court had decided
against the Coahuila gender quota, the federal law would definitely not have passed, and
both the Coahuila law and other state quotas would likely have been struck down. The
Courts willingness to challenge the executive on this issue proved critical to passing the
law. More research on judicial behavior, particularly cross-national research, will help to
determine the conditions under which courts are more or less likely to adjudicate on
behalf of organized interests. Courts have struck down quota laws in Italy, France, and
Colombia.44 The key point is that courts should not be ignored in explaining policy
outcomes in this area.
Shared experiences of being shut out from candidate slots precipitated the
formation of a coalition of women across party lines. Women capitalized on their
common interests and mobilized widespread public support for quotas to persuade
reluctant male colleagues to support the adoption of the quota law. Public support for
womens rights issues, and the inclusion of women in political decision-making
31
positions, is sufficiently high that politicians consider it unacceptable to oppose issues
framed in terms of womens rights. This in itself is an important point that indicates that a
significant change in gender norms has occurred. Women expected public pressure to be
a powerful tool to ensure full compliance with the law. The parties ultimately followed
the law, but not because they feared public admonition. The possibility of being denied
the right to nominate any candidates for office, a threat backed by the powerfully
autonomous Federal Electoral Institute, proved sufficiently great to ensure full
compliancewhile at the same time encouraging many of the larger parties to limit the
number of districts in which they had to comply. The degree to which parties chose
candidates by direct election and thus avoided the quota did not appear in media coverage
of the election. Yet the quota law had a significant impact in Mexico despite these
limitations.
32
Table 1. Gender Quota Laws for Legislative Candidates at the National Level
Country QuotaYear Adopted
Argentina 30%, every 3rd spot 1991Armenia 5% of PR lists 1999Belgium No more than 2/3 of same sex; top 3 cannot be
of same sex1994, 2002
Bolivia 30% in Chamber, 25% in Senate, for safe seats;increases 5% each election until 50% reached
1997
Bosnia/Herzegovina 1/3 1998
Brazil 30% of 1995, 1997
Costa Rica 40% of electable seats 1996
Dominican Republic 25% 1997
Ecuador 20% of PR seats 1997France 50% 1999Guyana 33% 1996Indonesia 30% 2003Macedonia 30% ??Morocco 30 of 325 are filled from women-only lists ??Mexico 30% of single-member districts; one of every 3
spots for PR lists2002
Nepal 5% of Chamber candidates; 3 seats in UpperHouse
1990
Panama 30% of Chamber candidates 1997Paraguay 20% 1996Peru 30% 1997, 2001Philippines Women must be included on lists 1995Serbia andMontenegro
30% for Serbian Chamber candidates; no quotafor Montenegro
2002
Venezuela 30% 1998Source: IDEA Quota Database http://www.idea.int/quota/index.cfm
33
Figure 1. Women in Mexican Chamber of Deputies
0.6%
2.5%
4.9% 4.9%
6.2%5.7%
6.6%
8.2%8.9%
8.0%
10.5% 10.5%
11.8%
8.8%
14.1%
17.4%
16.0%
23.2%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
52-55 55-58 58-61 61-64 64-67 67-70 70-73 73-76 76-79 79-82 82-85 85-88 88-91 91-94 94-97 97-00 00-03 376-86
34
Figure 2. Quota Law Compliance.
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
PRI
PAN
PRD
ALIA
NZAT
ODO PT
PVEM
CONV
ERG
ALIA
NZAS
OC
LIBE
RALM
EX
MEXP
OSIB
LE
SOCN
ACIO
N
FUER
ZA
% F
em
ale
Can
did
ate
s
SMD CandidatesPR Candidates
35
Figure 3. % Women in Applicable Districts vs. All Districts
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
PRI
PAN
PRD
ALIA
NZAT
ODO PT
PVEM
CONV
ERG
ALIA
NZAS
OC
LIBE
RALM
EX
MEXP
OSIB
LE
SOCN
ACIO
N
FUER
ZA
Perc
en
t o
f fe
male
can
did
ate
s
Applicable Districts
All Districts
36
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1 Quoted in Lesley Abdela, Women Lose Ground, The Guardian Unlimited, May 8, 2001. AccessedMary 15, 2002; [http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4182250,00.html].2 Line Bareiro and Clyde Soto, eds, Sola No Basta: mecanismos para mejorar la participacin poltica delas mujeres. Asuncon, Paraguay: Centro de Documentacin y Estudios Area Mujer and FundacinFriedrich Ebert, 1992, p. 11.3 For the complete list of countries, see the Quota database http://www.idea.int/quota/index.cfm.4 Gobbi, Carina. 1996. Reforma de la constitucon: una propuesta para la democracia completa: fempress.5 I borrow the term contagion effect from {Matland, 1996 #711}.6 I develop this argument about womens shared interest in political inclusion in Baldez, Lisa. 2002. WhyWomen Protest: Women's Movements in Chile. New York: Cambridge University Press..7 The text of the law is available at http://www.gobernacion.gob.mx/dof/dof_24-06-2002.pdf.8 The full text of Article 4 of CEDAW reads: Article 4. 1. Adoption by States Parties of temporary specialmeasures aimed at accelerating de facto equality between men and women shall not be considereddiscrimination as defined in the present Convention, but shall in no way entail as a consequence themaintenance of unequal or separate standards; these measures shall be discontinued when the objectives ofequality of opportunity and treatment have been achieved. Available athttp://www.un.org/unifem/cedaw9 Poll results reported in {Inter-American Dialogue, 1997 #910}10 On the other hand, the PRI had no internal elections but still nominated very few female candidates. Thenumber of women nominated by the PRI put it in ninth place Bruhn, Kathleen. 1997. Taking on Goliath:The Emergence of a New Left Party and the Struggle for Democracy in Mexico. University Park:Pennsylvania State University Press..11 Cdigo Federal de Instituciones y Procedimientos Electorales, Article 175, Paragraph 3.12 For polling data, see Domnguez, Jorge I., and James McCann. 1996. Democratizing Mexico: PublicOpinion and Electoral Choices. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. [Camp, page 67].13 The party also has quotas for young people and indigenous people: the statutes require that one in everyfive plurinomial candidates be filled by someone less than thirty years old, and that indigenous people holda percentage of seats proportional to their share of the population in each electoral district. The partystatutes are available at www.prd.org.14 Las impugnaciones contra el PRD, La Jornada, September 19, 2002:www.jornada.unam.mx/2001/sep01/010919/oriente-edit.html.15 See, for example, Exigen que el PAN retire propaganda que atenta contra la mujer en Michoacan LaJornada, October 24, 2002, www.jornada.unam.mx/2001/oct01/011024/045n2est.html.16 Interview, Mexico City, 2002.17 The 13 states are Aguascalientes, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Distrito Federal, Durango, Estado de Mexico,Oaxaca, Queretaro, San Luis Potos, Sinaloa, Sonora, and Tabasco. For a list of the Mexican states withquota provisions, go to http://www.laneta.apc.org/genero/cuotas.html. Quota bills are on the agenda inseveral other states and some states have nominal gender provisions that lack enforcement mechanismsMilenio. 2002. Un voto por la equidad. [cited.. The electoral law in Aguascalientes, for example, statessimply that political parties will seek greater participation among women and youth in popularly-electedpositions. See Cdigo Electoral del Estado de Aguascalientes, Article 15. Available athttp://www.congresoags.gob.mx/.18 The text of the Coahuila electoral law is available athttp://www.congresocoahuila.gob.mx/index.cfm/mod.legislacion_archivo/dir.LeyesEstatalesVigentes/index.coah.19 An action of unconstitutionality is a form of judicial review of the constitutionality of state and federallaws. See Staton, Jeffrey K. 2002. "Judicial Activism and Public Authority Compliance: The Role ofPublic Support in the Mexican Separation of Powers System, Department of Political Science, WashingtonUniversity., especially Chapter 4.20 No ha lugar proveer de conformidad con su solicitud, pues se hara nugatoria la facultad que laConstitucin confiere a esta Suprema Corte de Justicia, y porque la determinacin de considerar si losarticularos a que hace alusin son o no constitucionales, es una cuestin que atane al estudio de fonto delasunto.21 This logic has not extended to issues regarding the representation of indigenous people. President Foxinitiated a law based on the San Andres Accords signed by the government and the Zapatistas, which would
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modify the Constitution to give ethnic groups greater autonomy regarding local government, customs andland. Congress approved the law, but it was then sent (by whom?) to the Supreme Court for review. TheCourt decided against the law, declaring 321 constitutional controversies improcedentes [??].22 The law is named for its sponsor, PRD Deputy Rosario Robles. A group of 22 deputies from the MexicoCity Congress (17 from the PAN and 5 from the Green-Ecology Party) submitted an action ofinconstitutionality against the law, claiming that it violated constitutional guarantees of the right to lifefrom conception El Universal. 2002. A mujeres, 30 por ciento de candidaturas. [cited November 26,2002]. Available from www.el-universal.com.mx.. On January 28, 2002, the newspaper Universal ran afront-page story announcing that the Supreme Court was about to issue its decision on the case. The factthat this article appeared on the front page testifies to its importance. The Supreme Court upheld the law,ormore preciselyfailed to overturn it, by a vote of six to five. The majority opposed theconstitutionality of the law, but did not win the eight votes required to declare the law unconstitutional.The President of the Supreme Court and member of the minority in this decision, Genaro GngoraPimentel, celebrated the decision by saying What a good thing for the good of women! (que bien por elbien de las mujeres!) Aviles, Carlos. 2002. Avalan que MP autorice el aborto por violacon. El Universal[cited November 26, 2002]. Available from www.el-universal.com.mx.. Deputy Robles, commenting onthe decision, emphasized the partisan conflicts behind the abortion issue and pointed to the divisionsbetween the President and the Supreme Court Saul Rodriquez, Lilia. 2002. Entre musica y risas festejanmujeres fallo sobre el aborto. El Universal [cited November 26, 2002]. Available from www.el-universal.com.mx..23 Interview with Marta Laura Carranza Aguayo and Roberto Ortiz Vega, INAMU, Mexico City, July 18,2002.24 An article about the Supreme Court justices published in La Jornada, May 5, 2002, identifies a photo ofJustice Silva Meza with the caption Against the Quotas. A three-paragraph biography of him begins witha discussion of his stance on the Coahuila case Pastrana, Daniela. 2002. La corte manda. Jornada [citedNovember 26, 2002]. Available from www.jornada.unam.mx/2002/may02/020505/mas-corte.html..25 Interview, Mexico City, July 17, 2002.26 Interviews, Mexico City, July 16, 2002.27 Interview, Mexico City, July 16, 2002.28 Interview, Mexico City, July 18, 2002.29 Interview, Mexico City, July 16, 2002.30 Interview, Mexico City, July 18, 2002.31 Unfortunately, ads are not available on the online editions of most newspapers.32 Interview, Mexico City, July 15, 2002.33 Interview, Mexico City, May 27, 2003.34 Interview, Mexico City, July 16, 2002.35 Interview, Mexico City, July 18, 2002.36 Interview with German Martinez, Mexico City, July 18, 2002.37 Interview, Mexico City, July 18, 200238 Interview with Hortensia Aragon, Mexico City, July 2002.39 Interview, Mexico City, July 17, 2002.40 Interview, Mexico City, date.41 Interview, Mexico City, May XX, 2003.42 {Instituto Federal Electoral, 2003 #906}.43 I thank Andy Sobel for posing this question to me.44 The French case was in 1982. Recently the courts upheld the 1999 gender parity law.